OHM7: The Stevie Wonder Tribute Mix- 'Living Just Enough For The City'

OHM: Living Just Enough For The City- The Stevie Wonder Tributem Mixed By Phil Toke & The OHM Collective
A Funk, Soul and Disco Mix of Some of our Favourite Stevie Wonder Tracks,
Special Thanks to Australian Rozie at Flickr for use of her image.
Track List

Stevie Wonder - Have A Talk With God

Stevie Wonder - Pastime Paradise

Stevie Wonder - Living Just Enough For The City

Stevie Wonder - Superstition

Stevie Wonder - You Haven't Done Nothin'

Stevie Wonder - Ebony Eyes

Stevie Wonder - Summer Soft (OHM Collective EDIT)

Stevie Wonder - All Day Sucker

Stevie Wonder - I Wish

Stevie Wonder - That Girl

Stevie Wonder - Sir Duke

Stevie Wonder - Boogie On Reggae Woman

Stevie Wonder - Signed Sealed Delivered I'm Yours

Stevie Wonder - Black Man

Stevie Wonder - Do I Do

Stevie Wonder - Isn't She Lovely

Stevie Wonder - Another Star

Stevie Wonder - Confusion

Stevie Wonder - Masterblaster (Jammin')

Stevie Wonder - Part-Time Lover

STEVIE WONDERAcer Arena, October 22

"ARE you with me? Are we together?" cried Stevie Wonder at the top of a reggae-tinged Master Blaster, asking perhaps the most superfluous question in the history of questions. If love was in need of love in 1976 - as the man born Stevland Hardaway Judkins put it on his classic album Songs In The Key Of Life - there was certainly no shortage of it last night.
Wonder gave love, dedicating the whole show to the Four Tops singer Levi Stubbs, who died this week, before a jubilant rendition of the soul band's classic I Can't Help Myself. (It ended with Wonder crying visible tears.)
And boy, did he receive love. Before his daughter, Aisha Morris, had even led him all the way to his piano and banks of keyboards, the sold-out arena screamed with adulation.
Wonder at first just ambled towards the centre of the stage, beat-boxing to himself. Then he pulled out a harmonica, jammed along with his band to a Miles Davis jazz classic and pretty much earned every last scream.
His band was deliciously tight - a crack 14-piece unit including multiple horns, guitars and percussionists - and their leader almost shone with the star power and charisma you expected. You can still see that he really feels the music, loves hearing it and can't get enough of playing it.
Sure, but it's hard to think he could put a foot wrong. Really, he could have just stood at the stage for two hours humming to himself and this would have been a triumph. As it was, he played some mighty fine soul and funk as well as the occasional flourish of jazz and reggae groove.
By the end of the show we'd seen it all. A suspiciously good singer, "plucked out of the audience", duetting with his idol; a barrage of hits, good and not so good (but still irresistible), often jazzed up. And the presentation of a lifetime achievement award for sales in excess of 1 million in Australia before a roof-raising Superstition.
It was all about the love. By George Palathingal
@ Sydney Morning Herald,October 23, 2008
Acer Arena, October 22 Concert Videos